Hi,

I would think that the only way of doing this would be to have a USB sound card 
with an audio out port.  That way you could use a traditional splitter for 
this.  Alternatively, using wireless USB headsets, you might be able to use the 
wireless signal with more than one set of headphones.  The USB headphones 
actually appear as a second sound card in windows, so if there was some 
software to push the output from one card to the output of another, this would 
also work - I am not aware of any such software, but someone else on the list 
might be...

Andrew :)

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> -----Original Message-----
> From: owner-ag-t...@mcs.anl.gov [mailto:owner-ag-t...@mcs.anl.gov] On
> Behalf Of R. P. Channing ["Rick"] Rodgers
> Sent: 24 July 2006 15:47
> To: ag-t...@mcs.anl.gov
> Cc: rodg...@nlm.nih.gov; wan...@nlm.nih.gov
> Subject: [AG-TECH] Any "audio splitters" for USB headsets?
> 
> Does anyone know of a way of supplying headset services for two people,
> from
> one USB port -- the equivalent of a USB audio splitter?  Although we could
> envisage redirecting rat to a traditional 1/8" audio jack, it would
> be good to have a way of doing this with USB as well.
> 
> Thanks, Rick Rodgers
> 
> --------------------------------------------------------------------------
> ------
> R. P. C. Rodgers, M.D. * rodg...@nlm.nih.gov * (301)435-3267 (voice, fax)
> OHPCC, LHNCBC, U.S. National Library of Medicine, NIH
> Bldg 38, Rm. B1N-30F2, 8600 Rockville Pike, Bethesda MD 20894 USA
> http://lhc.nlm.nih.gov/staff/rodgers/rodgers.html
> 

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